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DoctrineMongoDBBundle

The MongoDB Object Document Mapper (ODM) is much like the Doctrine2 ORM in its philosophy and how it works. In other words, like the Doctrine2 ORM, with the Doctrine ODM, you deal only with plain PHP objects, which are then persisted transparently to and from MongoDB.

You can read more about the Doctrine MongoDB ODM via the project's documentation.

A bundle is available that integrates the Doctrine MongoDB ODM into Symfony, making it easy to configure and use.

This chapter will feel a lot like the Doctrine2 ORM chapter, which talks about how the Doctrine ORM can be used to persist data to relational databases (e.g. MySQL). This is on purpose - whether you persist to a relational database via the ORM or MongoDB via the ODM, the philosophies are very much the same.

Installation

To use the MongoDB ODM, you'll need two libraries provided by Doctrine and one bundle that integrates them into Symfony.

Install the bundle with Composer

To install DoctrineMongoDBBundle with Composer just add the following to your `composer.json` file:

{
    "require": {
        "doctrine/mongodb-odm": "^1.0",
        "doctrine/mongodb-odm-bundle": "^3.0"
    },
}

You can now install the new dependencies by running Composer's update command from the directory where your composer.json file is located:

$ php composer.phar update doctrine/mongodb-odm doctrine/mongodb-odm-bundle

Now, Composer will automatically download all required files, and install them for you.

Register the annotations and the bundle

Next, register the annotations library by adding the following to the autoloader (below the existing AnnotationRegistry::registerLoader line):

// app/autoload.php
use Doctrine\ODM\MongoDB\Mapping\Driver\AnnotationDriver;
AnnotationDriver::registerAnnotationClasses();

All that is left to do is to update your AppKernel.php file, and register the new bundle:

// app/AppKernel.php
public function registerBundles()
{
    $bundles = array(
        // ...
        new Doctrine\Bundle\MongoDBBundle\DoctrineMongoDBBundle(),
    );

    // ...
}

Congratulations! You're ready to get to work.

Configuration

To get started, you'll need some basic configuration that sets up the document manager. The easiest way is to enable auto_mapping, which will activate the MongoDB ODM across your application:

1# app/config/parameters.yml parameters: mongodb_server: "mongodb://localhost:27017"
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1# app/config/config.yml doctrine_mongodb: connections: default: server: "%mongodb_server%" options: {} default_database: test_database document_managers: default: auto_mapping: true
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Of course, you'll also need to make sure that the MongoDB server is running in the background. For more details, see the MongoDB Quick Start guide.

A Simple Example: A Product

The best way to understand the Doctrine MongoDB ODM is to see it in action. In this section, you'll walk through each step needed to start persisting documents to and from MongoDB.

Creating a Document Class

Suppose you're building an application where products need to be displayed. Without even thinking about Doctrine or MongoDB, you already know that you need a Product object to represent those products. Create this class inside the Document directory of your AcmeStoreBundle:

// src/Acme/StoreBundle/Document/Product.php
namespace Acme\StoreBundle\Document;

class Product
{
    protected $name;

    protected $price;
}

The class - often called a document, meaning a basic class that holds data - is simple and helps fulfill the business requirement of needing products in your application. This class can't be persisted to Doctrine MongoDB yet - it's just a simple PHP class.

Add Mapping Information

Doctrine allows you to work with MongoDB in a much more interesting way than just fetching data back and forth as an array. Instead, Doctrine allows you to persist entire objects to MongoDB and fetch entire objects out of MongoDB. This works by mapping a PHP class and its properties to entries of a MongoDB collection.

For Doctrine to be able to do this, you just have to create metadata, or configuration that tells Doctrine exactly how the Product class and its properties should be mapped to MongoDB. This metadata can be specified in a number of different formats including YAML, XML or directly inside the Product class via annotations:

  • PHP
    1// src/Acme/StoreBundle/Document/Product.php namespace Acme\StoreBundle\Document; use Doctrine\ODM\MongoDB\Mapping\Annotations as MongoDB; /** * @MongoDB\Document */ class Product { /** * @MongoDB\Id */ protected $id; /** * @MongoDB\Field(type="string") */ protected $name; /** * @MongoDB\Field(type="float") */ protected $price; }
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  • YAML
    1# src/Acme/StoreBundle/Resources/config/doctrine/Product.mongodb.yml Acme\StoreBundle\Document\Product: fields: id: id: true name: type: string price: type: float
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  • XML
    1<!-- src/Acme/StoreBundle/Resources/config/doctrine/Product.mongodb.xml --> <doctrine-mongo-mapping xmlns="http://doctrine-project.org/schemas/odm/doctrine-mongo-mapping" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://doctrine-project.org/schemas/odm/doctrine-mongo-mapping http://doctrine-project.org/schemas/odm/doctrine-mongo-mapping.xsd"> <document name="Acme\StoreBundle\Document\Product"> <field fieldName="id" id="true" /> <field fieldName="name" type="string" /> <field fieldName="price" type="float" /> </document> </doctrine-mongo-mapping>
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Doctrine allows you to choose from a wide variety of different field types, each with their own options. For information on the available field types, see the DoctrineMongoDBBundle section.

You can also check out Doctrine's Basic Mapping Documentation for all details about mapping information. If you use annotations, you'll need to prepend all annotations with MongoDB\ (e.g. MongoDB\String), which is not shown in Doctrine's documentation. You'll also need to include the use Doctrine\ODM\MongoDB\Mapping\Annotations as MongoDB; statement, which imports the MongoDB annotations prefix.

Generating Getters and Setters

Even though Doctrine now knows how to persist a Product object to MongoDB the class itself isn't really useful yet. Since Product is just a regular PHP class, you need to create getter and setter methods (e.g. getName(), setName()) in order to access its properties (since the properties are protected). Fortunately, Doctrine can do this for you by running:

$ php bin/console doctrine:mongodb:generate:documents AcmeStoreBundle

This command makes sure that all of the getters and setters are generated for the Product class. This is a safe command - you can run it over and over again: it only generates getters and setters that don't exist (i.e. it doesn't replace your existing methods).

Doctrine doesn't care whether your properties are protected or private, or whether or not you have a getter or setter function for a property. The getters and setters are generated here only because you'll need them to interact with your PHP object.

Persisting Objects to MongoDB

Now that you have a mapped Product document complete with getter and setter methods, you're ready to persist data to MongoDB. From inside a controller, this is pretty easy. Add the following method to the DefaultController of the bundle:

1// src/Acme/StoreBundle/Controller/DefaultController.php use Acme\StoreBundle\Document\Product; use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response; // ... public function createAction() { $product = new Product(); $product->setName('A Foo Bar'); $product->setPrice('19.99'); $dm = $this->get('doctrine_mongodb')->getManager(); $dm->persist($product); $dm->flush(); return new Response('Created product id '.$product->getId()); }
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If you're following along with this example, you'll need to create a route that points to this action to see it in work.

Let's walk through this example:

  • lines 8-10 In this section, you instantiate and work with the $product object like any other, normal PHP object;
  • line 12 This line fetches Doctrine's document manager object, which is responsible for handling the process of persisting and fetching objects to and from MongoDB;
  • line 13 The persist() method tells Doctrine to "manage" the $product object. This does not actually cause a query to be made to MongoDB (yet);
  • line 14 When the flush() method is called, Doctrine looks through all of the objects that it's managing to see if they need to be persisted to MongoDB. In this example, the $product object has not been persisted yet, so the document manager makes a query to MongoDB, which adds a new entry.

In fact, since Doctrine is aware of all your managed objects, when you call the flush() method, it calculates an overall changeset and executes the most efficient operation possible.

When creating or updating objects, the workflow is always the same. In the next section, you'll see how Doctrine is smart enough to update entries if they already exist in MongoDB.

Doctrine provides a library that allows you to programmatically load testing data into your project (i.e. fixture data). For information, see DoctrineFixturesBundle.

Fetching Objects from MongoDB

Fetching an object back out of MongoDB is even easier. For example, suppose you've configured a route to display a specific Product based on its id value:

public function showAction($id)
{
    $product = $this->get('doctrine_mongodb')
        ->getRepository('AcmeStoreBundle:Product')
        ->find($id);

    if (!$product) {
        throw $this->createNotFoundException('No product found for id '.$id);
    }

    // do something, like pass the $product object into a template
}

When you query for a particular type of object, you always use what's known as its repository. You can think of a repository as a PHP class whose only job is to help you fetch objects of a certain class. You can access the repository object for a document class via:

$repository = $this->get('doctrine_mongodb')
    ->getManager()
    ->getRepository('AcmeStoreBundle:Product');

The AcmeStoreBundle:Product string is a shortcut you can use anywhere in Doctrine instead of the full class name of the document (i.e. Acme\StoreBundle\Document\Product). As long as your document lives under the Document namespace of your bundle, this will work.

Once you have your repository, you have access to all sorts of helpful methods:

// query by the primary key (usually "id")
$product = $repository->find($id);

// dynamic method names to find based on a column value
$product = $repository->findOneById($id);
$product = $repository->findOneByName('foo');

// find *all* products
$products = $repository->findAll();

// find a group of products based on an arbitrary column value
$products = $repository->findByPrice(19.99);

Of course, you can also issue complex queries, which you'll learn more about in the Querying for Objects section.

You can also take advantage of the useful findBy() and findOneBy() methods to easily fetch objects based on multiple conditions:

// query for one product matching be name and price
$product = $repository->findOneBy(array('name' => 'foo', 'price' => 19.99));

// query for all products matching the name, ordered by price
$product = $repository->findBy(
    array('name' => 'foo'),
    array('price' => 'ASC'),
);

Updating an Object

Once you've fetched an object from Doctrine, updating it is easy. Suppose you have a route that maps a product id to an update action in a controller:

public function updateAction($id)
{
    $dm = $this->get('doctrine_mongodb')->getManager();
    $product = $dm->getRepository('AcmeStoreBundle:Product')->find($id);

    if (!$product) {
        throw $this->createNotFoundException('No product found for id '.$id);
    }

    $product->setName('New product name!');
    $dm->flush();

    return $this->redirectToRoute('homepage');
}

Updating an object involves just three steps:

  1. Fetching the object from Doctrine;
  2. Modifying the object;
  3. Calling flush() on the document manager.

Notice that calling $dm->persist($product) isn't necessary. Recall that this method simply tells Doctrine to manage or watch the $product object. In this case, since you fetched the $product object from Doctrine, it's already managed.

Deleting an Object

Deleting an object is very similar, but requires a call to the remove() method of the document manager:

$dm->remove($product);
$dm->flush();

As you might expect, the remove() method notifies Doctrine that you'd like to remove the given document from the MongoDB. The actual delete operation however, isn't actually executed until the flush() method is called.

Querying for Objects

As you saw above, the built-in repository class allows you to query for one or many objects based on an number of different parameters. When this is enough, this is the easiest way to query for documents. Of course, you can also create more complex queries.

Using the Query Builder

Doctrine's ODM ships with a query Builder object, which allows you to construct a query for exactly which documents you want to return. If you use an IDE, you can also take advantage of auto-completion as you type the method names. From inside a controller:

$products = $this->get('doctrine_mongodb')
    ->getManager()
    ->createQueryBuilder('AcmeStoreBundle:Product')
    ->field('name')->equals('foo')
    ->sort('price', 'ASC')
    ->limit(10)
    ->getQuery()
    ->execute()

In this case, 10 products with a name of foo, ordered from lowest price to highest price are returned.

The QueryBuilder object contains every method necessary to build your query. For more information on Doctrine's Query Builder, consult Doctrine's Query Builder documentation. For a list of the available conditions you can place on the query, see the Conditional Operators documentation specifically.

Custom Repository Classes

In the previous section, you began constructing and using more complex queries from inside a controller. In order to isolate, test and reuse these queries, it's a good idea to create a custom repository class for your document and add methods with your query logic there.

To do this, add the name of the repository class to your mapping definition.

  • PHP
    1// src/Acme/StoreBundle/Document/Product.php namespace Acme\StoreBundle\Document; use Doctrine\ODM\MongoDB\Mapping\Annotations as MongoDB; /** * @MongoDB\Document(repositoryClass="Acme\StoreBundle\Repository\ProductRepository") */ class Product { //... }
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  • YAML
    1# src/Acme/StoreBundle/Resources/config/doctrine/Product.mongodb.yml Acme\StoreBundle\Document\Product: repositoryClass: Acme\StoreBundle\Repository\ProductRepository # ...
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  • XML
    1<!-- src/Acme/StoreBundle/Resources/config/doctrine/Product.mongodb.xml --> <!-- ... --> <doctrine-mongo-mapping xmlns="http://doctrine-project.org/schemas/odm/doctrine-mongo-mapping" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://doctrine-project.org/schemas/odm/doctrine-mongo-mapping http://doctrine-project.org/schemas/odm/doctrine-mongo-mapping.xsd"> <document name="Acme\StoreBundle\Document\Product" repository-class="Acme\StoreBundle\Repository\ProductRepository"> <!-- ... --> </document> </doctrine-mong-mapping>
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Doctrine can generate the repository class for you by running:

$ php bin/console doctrine:mongodb:generate:repositories AcmeStoreBundle

Next, add a new method - findAllOrderedByName() - to the newly generated repository class. This method will query for all of the Product documents, ordered alphabetically.

1// src/Acme/StoreBundle/Repository/ProductRepository.php namespace Acme\StoreBundle\Repository; use Doctrine\ODM\MongoDB\DocumentRepository; class ProductRepository extends DocumentRepository { public function findAllOrderedByName() { return $this->createQueryBuilder() ->sort('name', 'ASC') ->getQuery() ->execute(); } }
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You can use this new method just like the default finder methods of the repository:

$products = $this->get('doctrine_mongodb')
    ->getManager()
    ->getRepository('AcmeStoreBundle:Product')
    ->findAllOrderedByName();

When using a custom repository class, you still have access to the default finder methods such as find() and findAll().

Doctrine Extensions: Timestampable, Sluggable, etc.

Doctrine is quite flexible, and a number of third-party extensions are available that allow you to easily perform repeated and common tasks on your entities. These include thing such as Sluggable, Timestampable, Loggable, Translatable, and Tree.

For more information on how to find and use these extensions, see the cookbook article about using common Doctrine extensions.

Doctrine Field Types Reference

Doctrine comes with a large number of field types available. Each of these maps a PHP data type to a specific MongoDB type. The following are just some of the types supported by Doctrine:

  • boolean
  • date
  • file
  • float
  • int
  • string
  • timestamp

For more information, see Doctrine's Mapping Types documentation.

Console Commands

The Doctrine2 ODM integration offers several console commands under the doctrine:mongodb namespace. To view the command list you can run the console without any arguments:

$ php bin/console

A list of available command will print out, many of which start with the doctrine:mongodb prefix. You can find out more information about any of these commands (or any Symfony command) by running the help command. For example, to get details about the doctrine:mongodb:query task, run:

$ php bin/console help doctrine:mongodb:query

To be able to load data fixtures into MongoDB, you will need to have the DoctrineFixturesBundle bundle installed. To learn how to do it, read the `DoctrineFixturesBundle`_ entry of the documentation.

Configuration

For detailed information on configuration options available when using the Doctrine ODM, see the MongoDB Reference section.

Registering Event Listeners and Subscribers

Doctrine allows you to register listeners and subscribers that are notified when different events occur inside Doctrine's ODM. For more information, see Doctrine's Event Documentation.

In addition to ODM events, you may also listen on lower-level MongoDB events, which you'll find defined in the Doctrine\MongoDB\Events class.

Each connection in Doctrine has its own event manager, which is shared with document managers tied to that connection. Listeners and subscribers may be registered with all event managers or just one (using the connection name).

In Symfony, you can register a listener or subscriber by creating a service and then tagging it with a specific tag.

  • event listener: Use the doctrine_mongodb.odm.event_listener tag to register a listener. The event attribute is required and should denote the event on which to listen. By default, listeners will be registered with event managers for all connections. To restrict a listener to a single connection, specify its name in the tag's connection attribute. The priority attribute, which defaults to 0 if omitted, may be used to control the order that listeners are registered. Much like Symfony2's event dispatcher, greater numbers will result in the listener executing first and listeners with the same priority will be executed in the order that they were registered with the event manager. Lastly, the lazy attribute, which defaults to false if omitted, may be used to request that the listener be lazily loaded by the event manager when its event is dispatched. .. configuration-block:: .. code-block:: yaml services: my_doctrine_listener: class: Acme\HelloBundle\Listener\MyDoctrineListener # ... tags:
    • { name: doctrine_mongodb.odm.event_listener, event: postPersist } .. code-block:: xml <service id="my_doctrine_listener" class="Acme\HelloBundle\Listener\MyDoctrineListener"> <!-- ... --> <tag name="doctrine_mongodb.odm.event_listener" event="postPersist" /> </service> .. code-block:: php $definition = new Definition('Acme\HelloBundle\Listener\MyDoctrineListener'); // ... $definition->addTag('doctrine_mongodb.odm.event_listener', array( 'event' => 'postPersist', )); $container->setDefinition('my_doctrine_listener', $definition);
  • event subscriber: Use the doctrine_mongodb.odm.event_subscriber tag to register a subscriber. Subscribers are responsible for implementing Doctrine\Common\EventSubscriber and a method for returning the events they will observe. For this reason, this tag has no event attribute; however, the connection, priority and lazy attributes are available.

Unlike Symfony2 event listeners, Doctrine's event manager expects each listener and subscriber to have a method name corresponding to the observed event(s). For this reason, the aforementioned tags have no method attribute.

SecurityBundle integration

A user provider is available for your MongoDB projects, working exactly the same as the entity` provider described in `the cookbook:

  • YAML
    1security: providers: my_mongo_provider: mongodb: {class: Acme\DemoBundle\Document\User, property: username}
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  • XML
    1<!-- app/config/security.xml --> <config> <provider name="my_mongo_provider"> <mongodb class="Acme\DemoBundle\Document\User" property="username" /> </provider> </config>
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Validation

This bundle provides a Unique constraint, which extends the UniqueEntity constraint provided by Symfony's Doctrine bridge. This constraint allows you to validate the uniqueness of an document field against the database.

The Unique constraint shares the same options as UniqueEntity, which means that the em option should be used if you wish to specify the document manager explicitly instead of having it be inferred from the document class.

Using the Abstraction Layer

Doctrine provides a thin wrapper for the PHP MongoDB client class which can conveniently be fetched from the Symfony2 service container. A similar example like the tutorial in the PHP Documentation might look something like this:

1// connect $m = $this->container->get('doctrine_mongodb.odm.default_connection'); // select a database $db = $m->selectDatabase('comedy'); // select a collection (analogous to a relational database's table) $collection = $db->createCollection('cartoons'); // add a record $document = array( "title" => "Calvin and Hobbes", "author" => "Bill Watterson" ); $collection->insert($document); // find everything in the collection $cursor = $collection->find();
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Reusing Mongo connection

If you find yourself in need of \Mongo class instance i.e. to store sessions in your Mongo database you may fetch it by defining following services:

  • YAML
    1services: mongo.connection: class: Doctrine\MongoDB\Connection factory: ["@doctrine.odm.mongodb.document_manager", getConnection] calls: - [initialize, []] mongo: class: Mongo factory: ["@mongo.connection", getMongo]
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  • XML
    1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?> <container xmlns="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services/services-1.0.xsd"> <services> <service id="mongo.connection" class="Doctrine\MongoDB\Connection"> <factory service="doctrine.odm.mongodb.document_manager" method="getConnection" /> <call method="initialize" /> </service> <service id="mongo" class="Doctrine\MongoDB\Connection"> <factory service="mongo.connection" method="getMongo" /> </service> </services> </container>
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Summary

With Doctrine, you can focus first on your objects and how they're useful in your application and worry about persisting to MongoDB second. This is because Doctrine allows you to use any PHP object to hold your data and relies on mapping metadata information to map an object's data to a MongoDB collection.

And even though Doctrine revolves around a simple concept, it's incredibly powerful, allowing you to create complex queries and subscribe to events thereby taking different actions as objects go through their persistence lifecycle.